US4384175A - Tone detection method and arrangement for observing and classifying repetitive status signals - Google Patents
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04M—TELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
- H04M3/00—Automatic or semi-automatic exchanges
- H04M3/22—Arrangements for supervision, monitoring or testing
- H04M3/24—Arrangements for supervision, monitoring or testing with provision for checking the normal operation
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04Q—SELECTING
- H04Q1/00—Details of selecting apparatus or arrangements
- H04Q1/18—Electrical details
- H04Q1/30—Signalling arrangements; Manipulation of signalling currents
- H04Q1/44—Signalling arrangements; Manipulation of signalling currents using alternate current
- H04Q1/444—Signalling arrangements; Manipulation of signalling currents using alternate current with voice-band signalling frequencies
- H04Q1/446—Signalling arrangements; Manipulation of signalling currents using alternate current with voice-band signalling frequencies using one signalling frequency
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- This invention relates to monitoring arrangements and particularly to arrangements for monitoring communication lines for the presence of certain signals. More particularly, this invention relates to service-observing arrangements for telecommunication networks wherein the status of a communication line can be ascertained from the presence of various signals detected on the line. In a still more particular aspect, this invention relates to a method and apparatus for identifying particular signals on communication lines to ascertain the disposition of cells in a telephone network.
- Typical signals present on telephone lines which indicate the disposition of the call are audible ringing, busy and reorder.
- the audible ringing signal is heard at the calling station when the called station is being rung to inform the calling customer that the connection has been completed. This tone continues until the called customer answers or the call is abandoned.
- Busy and reorder signals are heard when the called line is busy or when no circuits or equipment are available, such as during traffic overloads or equipment failures.
- the signals comprise voice frequency tones that are combined linearly or by modulation wherein the combined tones are then interrupted at a preassigned rate or cadence.
- the audible ringing signal may comprise a series of two-second tone bursts wherein adjacent bursts are separated by a four-second silent interval.
- the busy and reorder signals generally comprise a combination of tones interrupted at 60 and 120 times per second, respectively.
- busy and reorder signals may be generated by two methods, namely, the linear combination of 620 Hz and 480 Hz tones or by a method wherein a 600 Hz tone is modulated by a 120 Hz or 133 Hz signal.
- the busy and reorder signals are usually generated by the same method and differ only in cadence.
- the signals While the modulation of linear combination methods of generating signals have different frequency components, the signals nevertheless, provide the listener with comparable sounds having similar "buzz" or "pitch" rates.
- the 40 Hz envelope or pitch rate of the signal may be heard by the customer, while with the linearly combined signals the station transducers and human ear perceive a similar pitch rate sensation between 30 Hz and 50 Hz for the listener even though no energy is present on the line at the 30 Hz to 50 Hz rate.
- busy and reorder signals have a characteristic pitch rate within the 90 Hz to 150 Hz range that is discernible to the calling customer whether the signal was generated by the linear combination method or the modulation method outlined above.
- measuring the energy level precisely at one frequency, say 420 Hz for an audible ringing signal may be suitable for detecting the modulated version of an audible ringing signal, but this would be wholly unreliable for detecting an audible ringing signal which comprises the linear combination of 440 and 480 Hz.
- the foregoing problem is solved and a technical advance is achieved by an arrangement for automatically detecting and classifying signals on telephone lines such as audible ringing, busy and reorder by their pitch rate and cadence. More specifically, all signals on the telephone line within a designated bandwidth (i.e. the pitch rate) are removed by filtering. This eliminates the possibility that extraneous noise and voice signals at the pitch rate will be mistaken for a legitimate signal.
- the signal remaining after filtering is then modulated to produce energy at the sum and difference terms of the frequencies that are still present.
- the energy in the modulated signal is then measured at the pitch rate bandwidth. Any energy detected in this bandwidth after modulation is normalized by comparing its energy level with the total energy level of the signal on the line. The cadence of the normalized signal is thereafter ascertained to identify the signal.
- FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a typical service-observing arrangement embodying the invention
- FIG. 2 is a graphical representation of the different examples of interrupted tones that can be detected by the service-observing arrangement
- FIG. 3 is a graphical representation of a typical queue used in processing the signals detected by the service-observing arrangement
- FIGS. 4-6 when arranged according to FIG. 7, is a flow diagram of the MAIN control program which describes the overall sequence of operation of the processor used in the service-observing arrangement;
- FIGS. 8-10 when arranged according to FIG. 11, is a flow diagram of the subroutine TONE SEARCH which describes the service-observing arrangement processor operation in analyzing tones on a telephone line;
- FIGS. 12 and 13, when arranged according to FIG. 14, show a flow diagram for the subroutine RING EVAL which describes the processor operation within the service-observing arrangement wherein the cadence of audible ringing signals is ascertained;
- FIGS. 15 and 16 when arranged according to FIG. 17, show a flow diagram for the subroutine BUSY EVAL which describes the processor operation for detecting the cadence of busy and reorder signals.
- FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a service-observing arrangement incorporating the invention.
- the service-observing arrangement comprises a microprocessor 100, analog-to-digital converter 101, multiplexers 102 and 111, envelope detectors 103-105, and bandpass filters 106, 107 and 109 in addition to service-observing circuits 112 and 113 modulator 108 and amplifier 110.
- the service-observing circuits 112 and 113 provide an interface between the service-observing arrangement and the telephone switching network.
- service-observing circuits 112 and 113 are shown connected to outgoing trunks 114 and 115, respectively, and these trunks, in turn, are connected to telephone switching office 116.
- trunk circuit 114 is connected to service-observing circuit 112 over conductors 117 for monitoring the condition of trunk circuit 114.
- service-observing arrangements permit the monitoring of the transmission conductors and supervisory states of a trunk circuit so that the progress of calls and their disposition can be observed and recorded. While the observing circuit is shown connected only to outgoing trunks, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that these service-observing circuits can be connected to line circuits, attendant positions, etc.
- Service-observing circuits 112 and 113 are periodically scanned by multiplexer 111 which is under the control of processor 100 via data link 118.
- trunks, lines, etc. can be selectively monitored at different intervals and at varying rates depending upon the requirements of the system.
- service-observing arrangements are generally equipped to record the number dialed by the calling party and the on-hook or off-hook supervisory states of the trunk, etc.
- the invention disclosed herein is concerned mainly with the recognition and classification of various customer tone signals such as audible ringing, busy and reorder as described above.
- Busy and reorder signals are generally comprised of two frequencies interrupted at 60 and 120 interruptions per minute, respectively. Depending on the type of signal generator used, the signal may be made up at a 600 Hz tone modulated by a 120 Hz or 133 Hz tone. Other signal generators linearly combine a 480 Hz tone with a 620 Hz tone for both busy and reorder signals.
- the busy and reorder signals generated by a given switching office are usually derived from the same tone generators and differ only in their cadence.
- Audible ringing also has a distinct cadence which in some systems comprises successive two-second audible ringing bursts separated by four-second silent intervals.
- the signal for audible ringing may comprise a 420 Hz tone modulated by a 40 Hz tone, or a linear combination of two tones, namely 440 Hz and 480 Hz.
- a sample must be taken over a long interval to establish the cadence, particularly if complex coded ringing signals are used in party line systems and the like.
- signals falling within the pitch rate are first filtered from the monitored signal which is then modulated to produce energy at the pitch rate if audible ringing, busy or reorder signals are present.
- the incoming signal is amplified by amplifier 110 and passes through bandpass filter 109 which eliminates frequencies below 300 and above 900 Hz.
- Filter 109 provides a window just wide enough to pass the major spectral components of the customer signal. All other frequencies (including those at the pitch rate) having energy components outside of this range are blocked. Blocking these signals helps to prevent voice and extraneous noise at the pitch rate from being mistaken for a legitimate audible ringing, busy or reorder signal.
- the remaining signal from filter 109 is then processed by modulator 108.
- Modulator 108 in the illustrative embodiment is a nonlinear circuit and can be a precision rectifier or a squaring circuit as is well known in the art.
- a squaring circuit By squaring the signal from filter 109, energy is produced at the sum and difference terms of the freqencies present between 300 Hz and 900 Hz. If a legitimate busy, reorder or audible ringing signal is present, the difference terms will produce energy at the busy/reorder or ringback pitch rate, and this energy is applied to filters 106 and 107 and to envelope detector 103.
- Detector 103 provides an analog output measurement of the total energy present in the 300 Hz to 900 Hz bandwidth as modulated by modulator 108.
- the measurement is in the form of a voltage proportional to the magnitude of energy in this bandwidth and will be used as a reference level when the energy levels of the signals representing the busy/reorder and audible ringing are normalized.
- the output of modulator 108 is filtered by filters 106 and 107 which are the 30 Hz to 50 Hz and 90 Hz to 150 Hz bandpass filters, respectively. These filters are centered around the signal pitch rates for the audible ringing signal and the busy/reorder signals, respectively.
- the envelope detectors 104 and 105 provide an analog voltage output comparable to the energy produced at these pitch rates. Thus if an audible ringing signal is present the output of detector 104 will be high while busy or reorder signals will cause a high output from detector 105.
- the outputs of all three detectors 103-105 are sampled at a 500 Hz sampling rate by multiplexer 102 under the control of processor 100. Each sample is converted into a digital code by analog-to-digital converter 101 for transmittal to processor 100.
- Processor 100 analyzes the information from converter 101 to ascertain and classify the signal on the telephone circuit being monitored.
- processor 100 periodically sums a plurality of sample outputs from detectors 104 and 105. The sum of these samples is then divided by the sum of a plurality of sample outputs over the same time interval from detector 103. The latter samples represent the total energy on the line.
- the dividing process results in a term referred to herein as a normalized sample for audible ringing tone and a similar normalized sample for busy/reorder tone.
- normalized samples When sufficient normalized samples have been observed, they are examined to ascertain if they meet the repetitive pattern of known busy, reorder or audible ringing signals. This is done by comparing each normalized sample to preassigned threshold values and examining the number of normalized samples that meet this criteria and those that do not to ascertain if the normalized samples fit into predetermined cadence patterns.
- FIGS. 4-17 A description will now be given of the operation of processor 100 in connection with FIGS. 2 and 3 and the flow diagrams shown in FIGS. 4-17.
- the flow diagrams depict the sequence of operation of the processor in analyzing the signals, and the operations can be divided into a control program sequence and three subroutines.
- the control program sequence called MAIN is shown in FIGS. 4-7 and comprises a sequence of operations for gathering the sample data, normalizing the data, calling the other subroutines to analyze the data, and outputting the results of the determination.
- the three subroutines called by MAIN are identified as TONE SEARCH, BUSY EVAL and RING EVAL.
- the TONE SEARCH sub-routine analyzes the gathered samples to ascertain if the samples represent a possible audible ringing, busy or reorder tone, and the RING EVAL and BUSY EVAL subroutines analyze the results of the TONE SEARCH sequence to ascertain the cadence of the detected signal.
- FIG. 2 depicts six different conditions under which a ringing tone might be detected on the line.
- the ringing tone being described in this example comprises successive two-second audible ringing bursts separated by four-second silent intervals to make up a six-second repetitive signal.
- the tone is first detected and when the ringing is tripped by the called customer or when the call is abandoned by the calling customer, it might be impossible to detect the full six-second cycle on a repetitive basis.
- case A in FIG. 2 shows an example wherein more than one complete ringing cycle has been detected, namely, two full two-second ringing bursts separated by a four-second silent interval.
- Case B shows a situation where the connection was established during the middle of the first ringing interval and remains connected for at least one additional ringing interval, while case C shows a situation where one complete ringing burst was detected, but ringing is terminated during the second ringing burst either because the call was answered or abandoned.
- Case D depicts an audible ringing tone pattern wherein the signal was detected in the middle of the first ringing burst and terminated during the second ringing burst
- cases E and F depict situations where the call was terminated at the end of or during the first ringing burst that was detected.
- FIG. 2 relates to audible ringing signal situations, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that similar patterns can be illustrated for busy and reorder signals except that the duration of the tone burst and the silent interval between the bursts would differ. Also, the identification of busy and reorder signals in cases E and F would be less reliable since these signals generally use the same tones, and with only one tone sample the differences in cadence between busy and reorder cannot be measured reliably.
- the MAIN sequence of events generally controls the sampling of detectors 103 to 105 (FIG. 1) and loads the samples into sample queues.
- the TONE SEARCH subroutine will be called to ascertain if the detected tone is a valid audible ringing, busy or reorder tone, as distinguished from other tone bursts, speech or noise on the line. If a valid tone burst is indicated, either subroutine BUSY EVAL or RING EVAL will be called to check the cadence of the tone.
- the MAIN program is first initialized to set certain pointers equal to infinity, to set other pointers delimiting samples to indicate which samples have been processed by the program, and to establish certain queues to be used by the program. For example, to indicate the beginning and end of the first and second audible ringing tone intervals R1/ON and R1/OFF, R2/ON and R2/OFF are established. Similar pointers designated B1/ON, B1/OFF, B2/ON and B2/OFF are established for busy or reorder tones. A pointer designated RESTART is also set to equal the maximum buffer size to indicate that no samples have been processed at this time.
- decision box 401 is executed to ascertain if it is time to take a sample of detectors 103-105.
- samples are taken at a 500 Hz sampling rate.
- other sampling rates can be used within the spirit and scope of the invention.
- sample queues designated POWER-SAMPLE, RINGING-SAMPLE and BUSY-SAMPLE typically comprise software shift registers capable of storing the digital outputs of analog-to-digital converter 101 (FIG. 1) which converts the voltage level outputs of detectors 103-105 into digital words representing the detected level.
- the sample queues are of different lengths and are used to compensate for signal delays experienced in the particular implementation of bandpass filters 106-107.
- the samples from detector 105 are loaded into the BUSY-SAMPLE queue, it should be noted that these samples represent busy and reorder signals which differ in this embodiment only by their cadence.
- the samples are put in their respective queues shifting all existing samples one place and causing one sample to be shifted out of each register to be used in a subsequent summing process.
- the samples that are shifted out of the registers are summed with the prior samples as shown in box 403, and a total of twenty samples from each of the detectors is summed.
- the designations for the summed samples are SP, SQ1 and SQ2 for the power, ringing and busy/reorder tone samples, respectively.
- the ringing and busy/reorder tone samples are normalized as shown in box 405.
- the normalization process is accomplished by dividing the summation term SQ1 of the ringing tone samples and the summation term SQ2 of the busy/reorder tone samples by the summation term SP of the total power samples.
- the normalization process forms the new terms called "normalized samples" which are designated NQ1 and NQ2.
- the normalization process is performed to ascertain the energy on the line, when measured at the designated pitch rate, expressed as a ratio to the total power on the line.
- the normalized terms NQ1 and NQ2 would be larger for those samples taken of legitimate audible ringing and busy/reorder tones than when extraneous noise or other tones are detected.
- the normalized ringing and busy/reorder samples (NQ1 and NQ2) and the summation of the total power term SP are stored in three corresponding buffer queues (designated RINGING BUFFER, BUSY BUFFER, and POWER BUFFER) in the memory of processor 100 as shown in box 406.
- the bulk of the rest of the operation of the processor concerns analyzing in parallel the data stored in these three buffer queues.
- the RINGING BUFFER queue comprises a plurality of memory cells in the memory of processor 100. Each cell contains an entry representing the normalized ringing sample as calculated above. Also, certain of the entries are designated by pointers to indicate the oldest and newest entries, the beginning and end of identified ringing tone intervals, and the starting of a new batch of data to be processed.
- the RINGING BUFFER queue can be thought of as a shift register as illustrated in FIG. 3 where the rightmost cell contains the most recent sample and the leftmost cell contains the oldest sample. From the system's operational standpoint, the leftmost sample can be considered the current sample with all cells to the right being future samples so that the processor can look into the future to ascertain the sequence of tones and decide whether or not sufficient samples have been taken to ascertain the cadence of the signal at the time the current sample is being processed. Thus, the outputs are not reported in real time, but are delayed by the length of the buffer queues.
- Each cell contains a normalized ringing sample as described above. Since the normalized sample was calculated from twenty line samples at a 500 Hz scanning rate, each cell can be thought of as containing information observed on a line for 1/25th of a second.
- the ringing signal comprises nominally two-second audible tones separated by four-second silent intervals.
- the audible portion of the signal can fall within the range 1.4 seconds to 2.6 seconds and the silent portion between 2.8 seconds and 5.2 seconds. Consequently, the RINGING BUFFER queue can be 225 cells long for storing data representing a nine-second interval which would accommodate two full ringing bursts (one of which may be long) and a long silent interval.
- the buffer queues are loaded in real time, but the processor must wait, nevertheless, for a successive number of entries before an identification of the tone can be made.
- a pointer called RESTART is used. With respect to FIG. 3, the samples to the left of the RESTART pointer have been processed while those to the right of the pointer, including the sample addressed by the pointer, have not.
- Pointers used to define entries in the RINGING BUFFER queue are shown in FIG. 3. These pointers include R1/ON and R1/OFF, R2/ON and R2/OFF, etc. These pointers are set during the TONE SEARCH and RING EVAL subroutines and will be described below.
- the RESTART pointer is tested as set forth in box 408 to see if it points to cell zero. If it does not point to cell zero, it is shifted as shown in boxes 409-410, and more data is collected.
- the RESTART pointer once again points to cell zero, the TONE SEARCH subroutine shown in FIGS. 8-11 is called by the processor executing box 411.
- each entry in the power buffer, ringing buffer, and busy buffer queues contains the result of 20 samples having been summed. Moreover, the ringing and busy buffer queue entries have been normalized relative to the power buffer queue entries. The buffer queues are full as indicated by the RESTART pointer pointing to cell 0. Subroutine TONE SEARCH is now called.
- the TONE SEARCH subroutine is depicted in FIGS. 8-11 and sets the ringing and busy pointers to locations in the respective buffer queues where samples representing these tones are located. For example, with respect to FIG. 3, pointer R1/ON points to a cell where the beginning of the first ringing interval was detected, while R1/OFF points to the cell representing the end of the first ringing interval. R2/ON and R2/OFF do the same for the second ringing interval if one has been detected. Four pointers designated B1/ON, B1/OFF, B2/ON and B2/OFF do the same for the BUSY BUFFER which has not been shown to simplify the drawing.
- the ringing and busy pointers will be set to infinity, and the RESTART pointer is moved to the end of the queue so that another batch of data can be collected and processed.
- a "return" is made to the MAIN control program.
- the RING EVAL subroutine evaluates the cadence of the tones as further verification of an audible ringing signal, while in the case of the BUSY EVAL subroutine, the cadence is checked to ascertain if the tone is a busy tone or reorder signal.
- pointers RTN/ON and RTN/OFF will be set to indicate certain cells in the RINGING BUFFER queue which represent the beginning and end of an audible ringing signal. Similar pointers are set for the BUSY BUFFER queue. As new samples of data are added to the queues, these pointers are shifted to remain pointing to the same sample. When one of these pointers is set at cell zero, an indication of the tone that has been ascertained is reported. This sequence of events is depicted by boxes 504-509 and 600-605. Following the outputting of tone-on and tone-off signals, the summation of the power, ringing, and busy tone indications and the number of the sample being processed are reset to zero as shown in box 606. The program can now be reexecuted to gather new data samples for analyzation.
- the MAIN program calls the TONE SEARCH subroutine which is shown in FIGS. 8-11.
- the TONE SEARCH subroutine searches the data collected in the three buffer queues designated RINGING BUFFER, BUSY BUFFER and POWER BUFFER for the presence of possible "tone-on" intervals.
- the data is searched to ascertain if the power is within acceptable limits and to ascertain if the normalized ringing or busy/reorder samples exceed a predetermined threshold. If certain samples exceed these thresholds the number of samples is measured to ascertain if the possible "tone-on" interval fits within predesignated minimum and maximum length specifications. Also, the ratio of maximum to minimum power over a "tone-on" interval will be measured to see if it falls within designated criteria.
- the TONE SEARCH subroutine will generally search the collected data until all data is screened or until two valid "tone-on" intervals have been found.
- the TONE SEARCH subroutine controls several pointers in processing the data stored in the queues. Initially it sets a pointer designated "i" to zero as shown in box 800. The "i" pointer marks the cell to be processed by the subroutine, and initially the oldest or leftmost cell as shown in FIG. 3 is processed. This pointer will be incremented by the execution of the subroutine after each cell is examined until all current data in the buffer has been processed, or until two ringing tone or two busy tone intervals have been detected.
- box 801 tests to see if all cells have been processed or if two tone intervals have been detected, and if any one of these conditions have been met the RESTART pointer is reset and the subroutine is exited. If none of these conditions is met, all cells in the buffer will be examined and this begins by taking the summation of power sample in cell "i" (SPi) and testing to see if it is within the acceptable power limits as shown in box 803. This action ascertains whether the sample "i" being processed has sufficient power to be considered a possible "tone-on" condition. If it is not within the minimum and maximum thresholds, the pointer "i" is moved to the next sample.
- the minimum and maximum power limits are a matter of designer's choice depending on the requirements of the system. One might consider the range -4 dBm0 to -46 dBm0 acceptable.
- box 805 to ascertain if the sample is an audible ringing tone candidate. This is accomplished by ascertaining if the normalized ringing sample NQ1i is greater than the normalized busy/reorder tone sample NQ2i and also greater than the ringing tone threshold designated by a constant RTH stored in memory. If the sample does not meet this test, the system executes the "no" branch of box 805 to test if the sample in cell "i" is a possible busy tone candidate as shown in FIG. 10. If the sample is neither a ringing tone candidate or a busy/reorder tone candidate the pointer "i" is incremented to the next buffer cell sample as shown in box 1011 and the process is repeated on the next sample.
- boxes 806-814 and 900-910 describe the sequence of operations for analyzing additional buffer queue samples in anticipation of finding a series of cells meeting the above criteria so that when viewed together the cells define a legitimate ringing "tone-on" interval.
- boxes 1010-1032 would be executed. These boxes describe the sequence of events that are substantially the same as the functions performed by executing boxes 806-814 and 900-908 except that different pointers will be set to define possible busy/reorder "tone-on" candidates.
- the sample being processed is identified as a possible ringing tone candidate, its cell is marked by a pointer BEGIN (box 806), and the pointer "i" is incremented (box 808) in preparation for the analysis of the next cell.
- the processor under control of boxes 807-809, will continue to search the samples in the buffer queues to see if they also meet the above criteria, namely the sample is within the acceptable power limits and falls between the normalized busy tone and ringing tone thresholds.
- pointer "i" is incremented for examination of the next sample. Boxes 809 and 810 prevent the investigation of the samples from going beyond the most recent entries in the queues. If this does occur, the RESTART pointer is set to the same sample as the BEGIN pointer, and the TONE SEARCH subroutine will only process new data when the buffer queues have been filled again.
- pointer END will be set to the cell being examined as shown in box 811.
- the processor then executes box 812 to see if the "tone-on" candidate falls within the acceptable length tolerances defined by constants R/MAX and R/MIN to indicate it is a "ring-on" condition.
- the ringing signal comprises consecutive two-second ringing burst intervals separated by four-second silent intervals. It will be realized, however, that a connection may be established or terminated during a ringing burst wherein only a partial "ring-on" interval is detected.
- the minimum and maximum intervals for the ringing burst period have been selected in the illustrative example as 0.4 seconds and 2.6 seconds, respectively. However, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that other intervals can be chosen.
- the processor will perform the power ratio functions described in boxes 813, 814 and 905 on the "tone-on" candidate under consideration.
- the maximum and minimum power is ascertained over a portion of the "tone-on" interval. A few samples at the beginning and end of the interval are excluded since some ringing tone signals contain transients at the leading and trailing edges which peak above the maximum power.
- the number of samples to be ignored is determined by a constant designated RING/EDGE, and the quantity of samples defined by RING/EDGE is deleted from the beginning and end (boxes 813, 814) of the samples in the cells between the pointers BEGIN and END, each remaining cell is examined (boxes 900, 901) to ascertain what the maximum and minimum SP power is.
- the pointer "j" is established at this time to keep track of the cells being examined.
- a ratio is formed of the maximum power to the minimum power samples. This ratio is compared to a constant designated RING/RATIO as shown in box 905.
- the ratio of maximum to minimum SP power has been selected as two and, if the sample data meets this criteria, it indicates that the "tone-on" interval is a valid "ring-on” interval. Boxes 906-910 will be executed now to set the pointers R1/ON and R1/OFF to mark the beginning and end of the "ring-on" location in the RINGING BUFFER queue. If a "ring-on" interval had been detected previously, the beginning and end of this "tone-on" interval would be marked with the pointers R2/ON and R2/OFF indicating it is the second interval that has been detected.
- the RING EVAL or BUSY EVAL subroutine will be called by the MAIN control program in executing boxes 501-503. These EVAL subroutines are primarily concerned with the cadence of the detected signals. To illustrate, the RING EVAL subroutine flow diagram is shown in FIGS. 12-14, and the operation of the system will now be described with respect to this flow diagram.
- the processor first sets the pointer designated RTN/ON, this is the ringing "tone-on" pointer and will be set at the beginning of the first "ring-on” interval as shown in box 1200.
- the processor then checks the length of the "ring-on" ringing interval to ascertain if it is a partial or short ring.
- the short ring is defined herein as a "ring-on" interval less than or equal to 1.4 seconds and greater than or equal to 0.4 seconds. This occurs when a line is connected to or disconnected from a ringing source during a ringing burst interval.
- the second "ring-on" interval is checked by executing the decision box 1202 or 1300.
- Decision boxes 1203, 1207, 1301 and 1305 are executed to ascertain the cadence of the signal which can fall into any one of the six cases shown in FIG. 2.
- the processor checks the intertone gap and timing between the leading and/or trailing edges of successive intervals.
- box 1203 will be executed to ascertain if a "two-second-on, four-second off, two-second-on" ringing cycle has been detected. This is the case A sample shown in FIG. 2.
- the processor compares the time interval between the leading edges of the two "ring-on" periods (R2/ON) minus R1/ON) and the trailing edges of the "ring-on” periods (R2/OFF minus R1/OFF) to a constant designated RPER/MAX.
- the RPER/MAX constant has been selected to equal 6.6 seconds in this illustrative embodiment.
- the processor also compares the interval between the first and second "ring-on" periods with ringing gap constants designated RGAP/MIN and RGAP/MAX. These constants have been selected as 2.8 seconds and 5.2 seconds, respectively, in this embodiment, but other constants can be used within the spirit and scope of the invention.
- the RESTART pointer is reset to the cell designated R2/OFF and both pointers R1/ON and R1/OFF are moved to the cells priorly designated by the pointers R2/ON and R2/OFF. The latter pointers are reset to infinity.
- box 1207, 1301 or 1305 will be executed. For example, let it be assumed that the call had been answered during the second "ring-on" interval after a full "ring-on” interval has been detected. This is designated as case C in FIG. 2, and the pointers will be set to the cells in the RINGING BUFFER as shown in FIG. 3.
- the processor will execute boxes 1201 and 1202 and since the second "ring-on" interval has been detected as short, the "no" branch of box 1202 is executed causing the processor to follow the sequence of events in box 1207. In this case the interval between the trailing edges of the two "ring-on" periods is not checked.
- the processor determines that the second "ring-on" interval is the end of the ringing signal and pointer RTN/OFF is set to the cell at the end of the second "ring-on” period causing this result to be outputted. If one of the tests in box 1207 fails the processor assumes that the first and second "ring-on" intervals are actually part of separate ringing signals and sets the RESTART and RTN/OFF pointers to the cell designating the end of the first "ring-on” interval and begins collecting samples for the new ringing signal.
- case A as shown in FIG. 2 is screened by box 1203 and case B is screened by box 1301.
- Case C (described above) and case E are ascertained by executing decision box 1207 while box 1305 screens the cases D and F as shown in FIG. 2. If a leading or trailing edge is suspected of being clipped, that edge is not considered in the cadence check. Thus, in box 1305 where one or both "ring-on" intervals have been analyzed as short, only the gap between the intervals is checked during the cadence screening process.
- the cadence test will fail and the "no" branch of boxes 1207 or 1305 will be executed.
- the ringing tone off pointer (RTN/OFF) will be set pointing to the end of the first detected ringing interval. This designates the time in which the main program will cause the processor to output the ringing tone off report.
- the "no" branch of box 1203, 1207, 1301 or 1305 is executed and the second "ring-on" interval is assumed to be the start of a new ringing signal.
- the BUSY EVAL subroutine is called by the MAIN control program sequence when box 503 (FIG. 5) is executed.
- the BUSY EVAL subroutine is depicted in FIGS. 15 and 16 (arranged according to FIG. 17) and when executed by processor 100, the subroutine performs the cadence checking for busy and reorder signals as the RING EVAL subroutine does for audible ringing signals.
- the BUSY EVAL subroutine must determine if the "tone-on" intervals detected are either busy or reorder since these signals use the same source and only differ by cadence in the illustrative embodiment.
- the busy signal is a combination of tones interrupted 60 times per minute while the reorder signal is the same combination of tones interrupted 120 times per minute. Consequently, if only one "tone-on" interval is detected the signal may not be classified in some cases.
- the system may not be able to distinguish between a busy tone that was cut short and a reorder "tone-on" interval which is usually half as long as the normal busy "tone-on” interval.
- the BUSY EVAL subroutine will not be described in detail herein since it functions for determining the cadence of busy/reorder tones and is similar to the functions described above with respect to the RING EVAL subroutine in the determination of the cadence of ringing signals.
- box 1502 recognizes a busy signal when two normal "busy-on" intervals have been detected while box 1506 recognizes a busy signal from one normal "busy-on” interval followed by a short "busy-on” tone.
- Box 1606 when executed, determines that a busy signal is present on the basis of two short "busy-on” intervals that are separated by the appropriate time interval, while box 1601 recognizes a busy from an initial short "tone-on” interval followed by a normal "tone on” interval.
- box 1606 the processor ascertains that this is a busy signal by virtue of the length of the gap between "busy-on” intervals since both "busy on” intervals are short.
- box 1605 is executed to ascertain that the signal is a reorder signal due to the two short "tone-on” intervals and the short silent gap between them.
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Abstract
Description
______________________________________
BUF Defines length of buffer queues.
Illustratively equal to 9 seconds which is
long enough to store samples of two valid
"ring-on" intervals.
P, Q1, Q2 Outputs from detectors 103, 104 and 105 that
represent, respectively, the total energy on
the line and the energy at the designated
pitch rates for ringing and busy/reorder.
SP, SQ1, SQ2
A summation of samples of P, Q1, and Q2,
respectively.
NQ1, NQ2 Normalized ringing and busy/reorder samples
derived by dividing summation terms at the
pitch rate by the summation of power.
SP/MIN The minimum and maximum acceptable tone
SP/MAX power thresholds (illustratively
-4dBm0 and -46dBm0, respectively).
RESTART Pointer to the buffer queue that delimits
the samples in cells that have been
processed from those samples that have not.
BEGIN Pointers to the buffer queue
END marking the beginning and end of a
"tone-on" interval.
MIN Minimum and maximum power values found
MAX in the buffer queue cells.
ROTN/ON Pointers to the buffer queue marking
ROTN/OFF the beginning and end of a detected
reorder signal.
R1/ON Pointers to the buffer queue marking
R1/OFF the beginning and end of the first
R2/ON and second "ring-on" intervals,
R2/OFF respectively.
RTN/ON Pointers to the buffer queue marking
RTN/OFF the beginning and end of a
detected ringing signal.
R/MIN The minimum and maximum "ring-on"
R/MAX interval (illustratively 0.4 sec. and
2.6 sec., respectively).
R/EDGE The number of samples to be deleted from
"ring-on" samples to eliminate leading and
trailing edge transients (illustratively 3
cells).
RGAP/MIN The minimum and maximum intervals
RGAP/MAX between successive "ring-on"
intervals (illustratively 2.8 sec.
and 5.2 sec., respectively).
RPER/MAX The maximum ringing period including
one audible and one silent interval
(illustratively 6.6 sec.)
R/RATIO The maximum acceptable ratio of maximum
power to minimum power during "ring-on"
interval (illustrative value = 2)
RTH The minimum threshold a normalized sample
must exceed to be considered a "ring-on"
candidate.
B1/ON Pointers to the buffer queue marking
B1/OFF beginning and end of the first and
B2/ON second "busy-on" intervals, respectively.
B2/OFF
BTN/ON Pointers to the buffer queue marking
BTN/OFF the beginning and end of a detected
busy signal.
B/MIN The minimum and maximum "busy-on"
B/MAX interval (illustratively 0.2 sec.
and 0.68 sec., respectively)
B/EDGE The number of samples to be deleted
from "busy-on" samples to eliminate
leading and trailing edge transients
(illustratively 1 cell).
BGAP/MIN Minimum and maximum intervals
BGAP/MAX between successive "busy-on" intervals
(illustratively 0.32 sec. and 0.72 sec.,
respectively).
B/RATIO Maximum acceptable ratio of maximum
power to minimum power during
"busy-on" interval (illustrative value = 2).
BTH The minimum threshold a normalized
sample must exceed to be considered
a "busy-on" candidate.
BPER/MAX The maximum busy period (illustratively
1.12 sec.)
ROPER/MAX The maximum reorder period
(illustratively 0.56 sec.)
ROGAP/MAX The maximum and minimum interval between
ROGAP/MIN two successive "busy-on" intervals in a
reorder tone (illustratively 0.36 sec.
and 0.24 sec., respectively).
______________________________________
Claims (12)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/299,888 US4384175A (en) | 1981-09-08 | 1981-09-08 | Tone detection method and arrangement for observing and classifying repetitive status signals |
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/299,888 US4384175A (en) | 1981-09-08 | 1981-09-08 | Tone detection method and arrangement for observing and classifying repetitive status signals |
Publications (1)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US4384175A true US4384175A (en) | 1983-05-17 |
Family
ID=23156730
Family Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US06/299,888 Expired - Lifetime US4384175A (en) | 1981-09-08 | 1981-09-08 | Tone detection method and arrangement for observing and classifying repetitive status signals |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US4384175A (en) |
Cited By (4)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US4726057A (en) * | 1986-07-28 | 1988-02-16 | AT&T Information Systems Inc. American Telephone & Telegraph Company | Answer detection method and apparatus for coin telephone sets |
| US4768222A (en) * | 1984-11-22 | 1988-08-30 | Rene Kalfon | Control and surveillance system for prepayment public telephone apparatus |
| US4794633A (en) * | 1987-02-24 | 1988-12-27 | Illinois Bell Telephone Company | Mass polling system |
| US20060155535A1 (en) * | 2001-12-31 | 2006-07-13 | Nellymoser, Inc. A Delaware Corporation | System and method for generating an identification signal for electronic devices |
Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3920913A (en) * | 1974-01-31 | 1975-11-18 | Trw Inc | Ringback tone apparatus and telephone metering system |
| US4066843A (en) * | 1975-03-28 | 1978-01-03 | Applied Data Research, Inc. | Telephone circuit monitoring system |
-
1981
- 1981-09-08 US US06/299,888 patent/US4384175A/en not_active Expired - Lifetime
Patent Citations (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US3920913A (en) * | 1974-01-31 | 1975-11-18 | Trw Inc | Ringback tone apparatus and telephone metering system |
| US4066843A (en) * | 1975-03-28 | 1978-01-03 | Applied Data Research, Inc. | Telephone circuit monitoring system |
Cited By (7)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US4768222A (en) * | 1984-11-22 | 1988-08-30 | Rene Kalfon | Control and surveillance system for prepayment public telephone apparatus |
| US4726057A (en) * | 1986-07-28 | 1988-02-16 | AT&T Information Systems Inc. American Telephone & Telegraph Company | Answer detection method and apparatus for coin telephone sets |
| US4794633A (en) * | 1987-02-24 | 1988-12-27 | Illinois Bell Telephone Company | Mass polling system |
| US20060155535A1 (en) * | 2001-12-31 | 2006-07-13 | Nellymoser, Inc. A Delaware Corporation | System and method for generating an identification signal for electronic devices |
| US20060167698A1 (en) * | 2001-12-31 | 2006-07-27 | Nellymoser, Inc., A Massachusetts Corporation | System and method for generating an identification signal for electronic devices |
| US7346500B2 (en) | 2001-12-31 | 2008-03-18 | Nellymoser, Inc. | Method of translating a voice signal to a series of discrete tones |
| US7353167B2 (en) | 2001-12-31 | 2008-04-01 | Nellymoser, Inc. | Translating a voice signal into an output representation of discrete tones |
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